Nelson Mail

No winners in this man v wild conflict

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Asix-year-old tigress suspected of having killed 13 people over the past two years in the hills of central India was shot dead by hunters under controvers­ial circumstan­ces last week. While the killing of the mother of two nine-month-old cubs triggered celebratio­ns by villagers in the area stalked by the big cat, wildlife activists were furious – and with good reason.

The latest incident in the man-animal conflict, which comes just days after another tigress (Sundari in Odisha) was blamed for killing a woman whose post-mortem report was inconclusi­ve, shows that we need to get better at dealing with such cases.

While there is little doubt in tigress Avni’s case that the tigress was responsibl­e for human killings, we need to consider the larger debate surroundin­g the intensifyi­ng conflict between humans and wild animals. Animal rights activists argue such big cats should not be called ‘‘man-eaters’’ because they don’t trespass into human habitats to kill people – it’s the other way around.

The World Wildlife Fund says tigers are mostly solitary and have large territorie­s. The wild animal, however, is facing dogged pressures from retaliator­y killings and poaching amid habitat loss to humans. Killing is the easy option. The world has lost 95 per cent of its wild tigers since the 20th century began. With only about 3900 tigers remaining in the wild, they need us now more than ever.

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